tamarjacobson

Looking back and thinking forward

Category: Uncategorized

Talking about narcissism

Quote of the day:

Naturally, there is something narcissistic about blogging. You have to believe that what you have to say is important enough for other people to hear. Twenge’s claim that the ability to express yourself actually “fuels” narcissism, rather than attracting narcissistic people (as does acting, journalism, and other careers—ahem, teaching—that require personal performance) seems to me to be more than a little premature. But what about this: are we all becoming narcissists? Alex Halavais

Lilian Katz questions whether teachers of young children, in trying to help them "feel good about themselves" might, in fact, be encouraging narcissism instead.

I wonder if I am also tending towards being a clinical narcissist like Alex?

  • I have a natural talent for influencing people < –> I am not good at influencing people.
  • I think I am a special person. < –> I am no better or no worse than most people.
  • I will be a success. < –> I am not to concerned about success.
  • If I ruled the world it would be a better place. < –> The thought of ruling the world frightens the hell out of me.
  • I see myself as a good leader. < –> I am not sure if I would make a good leader.
  • I like to start new fads and fashion. < –> I don’t care about new fads and fashion.
  • I sometimes depend on people to get things done. < –> I rarely depend on anyone else to get things done.

Check out his entire post here.

A laugh?

It is always worth visiting Listics. I do, daily.

A year ago at Tamarika: Memed again

Bits of me

Ooh, this is fun. I found it at savtadotty. Here is mine:

http://dna.imagini.net/friends/swf/widget.swf

A year ago at Tamarika: A guest in your house

Time of day

Quote of the day:

George Washington Carver once warned against letting any man drag you so low as to make you hate him. Marian Wright Edelman

I am always amazed at my own resilience. Sometimes at night I am exhausted. Physically, emotionally, cognitively. From working, thinking, feeling all day. And then after a good night’s sleep I wake up full of bounce and energy ready to go again. The night before, all the days ahead seem so full of work and responsibility that I feel I might fall down under the weight of it. And so, lately, when I start to feel overwhelmed in the night, sometimes just before I fall asleep, for example, I say to myself in my mind, "Don’t think about it now. Wait until tomorrow morning," and then I fall right to sleep as relaxed as can be, as if some kindly, strong and constant parent has just tucked me into bed. And then, the next morning, the burden seems as light as can be and I am rearing to go.

Resilience is intriguing to me. I don’t think I’m alone in my fascination with humankind’s will to survive even the harshest of circumstances. Tales of this or that person’s strength when all seems lost hold my attention and inspire me. Always have. I am especially struck by people who seem to have no fear and do great deeds: Joan of Arc, Mother Teresa, you know, people like that. Fear is such a stumbling block to activism. Fear of what people think, wanting to be liked by everyone, fear of the unknown, physical or emotional discomfort, or even fear of one’s own mortality.

For the longest time I hoped someone would come along and save me. Now I understand that resilience has also to do with realizing I am the only person who can save me. When I am out of confidence or sliding into one of my ancient abysses, that realization seems lonely. On the other hand, early in the next morning of energy and bounce-back, that realization feels like strength and courage.

Resilience has to do with energy, bounce-back, hope, strength, courage, the ability to climb out of the abyss, and most importantly, attitude.

And for me, resilience has to do with time of day.

I’ve got my routine

Happy Spring, Bloggers!

Dedicating this, one of my all time favorite songs from my all-time favorite movie, Magnolia, to all us "inner-musing-navel-gazing-all-connected-bloggers" out there, not because I think it pertains to you, but because I want to share with you that which is so relevant for me:

Momentum: Aimee Mann

Oh, for the sake of momentum
I’ve allowed my fears to get larger than life
And it’s brought me to my current agendum
Whereupon I deny fulfillment has yet to arrive

[Chorus:]
And I know life is getting shorter
I can’t bring myself to set the scene
Even when it’s approaching torture
I’ve got my routine

Oh, for the sake of momentum
Even though I agree with that stuff about seizing the day
But I hate to think of effort expended
All those minutes and days and hours
I have frittered away.

[Chorus]

But I can’t confront the doubts I have
I can’t admit that maybe the past was bad
And so, for the sake of momentum
I’m condemning the future to death
So it can match the past
.

A year ago at Tamarika: Old ways of communicating

From a short dialogue …

… which started back here:

Descriptions of purely inner musings are self-obsessive and irrelevant to anyone else. Andy at Older, But No Wiser.

… and continued with Andy:

But something I read at your place, Tamarika, made me wonder whether that joining up of worlds always has to be in a single post, or whether the weaving might not take place just as effectively across a spectrum of posts and the conversations which arise out of them?

… and I replied:

Yes, yes, Andy. I think that’s true for me, certainly. The weaving takes place across and through all of my posts and comments all over my blog all the time. In fact, I think of it as one long tale of my emotional, imaginative, psychical, cyclical, realistic, physical, and spiritual worlds/life – whatever – all the time. So that, indeed, even though it might be considered self-obsessive, navel-gazing, it can be relevant and connected to others too. By knowing me, by identifying with pieces that are themselves or the external world of society really or virtually …

For we are, all, connected.

Afterwards

Ist2_2057293_wilted_rose During our anniversary the house was full of flowers. Daffodils of course, the symbolic flower of the day for us. Freesias that were ordered for the table at the romantic restaurant dinner, and then a bunch of carnations and such as a gift just because the day was the day. It was all so pretty and festive. Wherever the eye fell there bloomed another flower. After a week they all started to wilt. That’s what happens with flowers. It’s the nature of things. They herald the aftermath, the clean-up after the party, or the farewell-it’s-over-time-to-move-on-to-the-next-thing. Sometimes I try to salvage a few remaining live flowers and create a new arrangement to last just a few more days, but they always look different somehow. Not quite right. Like holding-on-to-the-past-too-long …

Celebrations are like that. The build-up, the festivities, and then, the clean up and move on. Cyclical. Come and gone.

Not quite gone though. For they leave behind a trail of memories that stay with us, sometimes, forever. My old friend, Mary sent me an e-mail once after we had danced together all night at a conference. She wrote:

tamar

memories are moments that refuse to be …

ordinary

A year ago at Tamarika: The gift of early childhood

Bug on its back

Quote of the day:

Windowsliv_4 

From Winston at Nobody Asked.

Hello blog. I’m back. I’ve been away for awhile. I mean, that’s how it felt. In fact, it felt like a bug on its back, little legs flailing about in the air unable to turn over upright again. Almost like I could not seem to find my way back to me. And then suddenly someone said to me, "Imagine that they cut off your leg below the knee. And you had to learn to live without it."

What a metaphor. It made sense instantaneously. Of course, it made me really mad at first. You know, that stage that always comes right before acceptance?

And now the bug is almost right side up, legs still struggling, going at quite a pace, still a bit out of control. A little nudge and soon it will be upright again, waddling off into the sunset. Isn’t that where all little bugs scramble off to?

And just as it all started falling back into place, I met a brand new friend. On the train. Coming back from presenting at a conference. The workshop was a hit. Accolades galore. And then I met a brand new friend.

That’s what happens when the bug turns upright again. Feelers reach up and out and open its buggy heart and soul to brand new friends.

Just like that.

A year ago at Tamarika: Green, green

Driving in my car, car

I didn’t always own a car. Living in Israel 19 years ago I used public transport but mostly rode to and from work on an old Raleigh bicycle. I loved my bike. In January 1988 I wrote a little piece in my journal about it. I was preparing to give the bicycle away to my step-daughter, Tammy, as I planned to emigrate to America. I wrote:

I like the idea of riding through my life. I jump on my bicycle – blue and silver, gentle friend – you gave me strength, stability, you helped me share the world around – the sea, the green, the warm, spring days, the blistering summer wind, the cold, wet winter – on your saddle, your wheels spinning round, you helped me realize my own strength, my freedom to choose, to act – I loved you so for this. I would ride with the wind in my hair – so free, so at one with all around me, and slowly but surely I built up the shivering, trembling, frightened me. I learned my strengths, I learned my weaknesses, I learned my independence and learned to love my alone-ness.

These days I hardly ever ride a bike. I take trains and walk, but mainly I drive. Nowadays, I love my car. It has become like a little home as I commute for hours back and forth from work, to and fro shopping around about the Chestnut Hill area. On the front seat, at my side I have a box of tissues, flashlight and cough drops. In the cupholder is a tall bottle of water. Sticking out of the heating duct is a little, rubbery green frog that Janna once gave me because I loved the movie, Magnolia so much when it first came out that I saw it three times in one week. Also from Janna is a little Mickey Mouse doll she picked up with a Happy Meal she purchased years ago. When I came out to my car, Mickey was lying face down on the windscreen under the windshield wiper. As Director of the Child Care Center in those days, I was very strict about not allowing Disney characters to decorate the walls. I guess Janna thought I deserved such a Mickey for putting them through a strict aesthetic code! I love my frog and Mickey because that way I know that Janna thought about me. In a drawer under the dashboard I store my Cd’s that fill the car with music as I drive: Eric Clapton, The Idan Raichel Project, a CD of "music for Tamar" created by Anya last summer, and Patti Griffin, to name a few.

Patti Griffin sings as I drive:

Making all this time stand still
I’m
standing, I’m standing, I’m standing
… Mother, I am weak but I am strong
Standing in the darkness this long
But in the deepest darkness I listen to your song
Mother I am weak but I am strong

And I become stronger. Just like all those years ago, when I was young, lithe, and brown-skinned, and rode my bicycle through my life.

A year ago at Tamarika: A note (update)

Made of the same stuff

Quote of the day:

We can make the sun shine when it’s dark and make it dark when the sun shines; we can be warm when it’s cold or cold when it’s warm.  But in the process we’ve disconnected ourselves from the essential of life, which is nature…we need to remember that we are all made out of the same stuff.  In every one of us there’s a little bit of whale, of rose, of fern, of butterfly.

Jean-Michel Cousteau, son of famed oceanographer Jacques Cousteau, speaking as part of the Distinguished Speakers Series, University at Buffalo on March 1.